​Silent Circle shifts to Switzerland to bypass US surveillance

As US mass surveillance continues to make headlines, one man has had enough. Philip Zimmermann, creator of one of the most widely-used encryption systems, has moved his company to Switzerland, claiming societies need to “roll back” surveillance tactics.

Expressing his concerns
about mass surveillance, Zimmerman told the Guardian that “every dystopian
society has excessive surveillance, but now we see even Western
democracies like the US and England moving that way.”

Zimmerman is the inventor of the encryption program Pretty Good
Privacy (PGP), as well as the co-founder of three-year-old
encryption start-up Silent Circle.

“We have to roll this back.
People who are not suspected of committing crimes should not have
information collected and stored in a database. We don’t want to
become like North Korea,” the Internet Hall of Fame inductee
continued.

Silent Circle will now operate from Switzerland – a move prompted
by the 2013 Lavabit incident. The founder of Lavabit – which
provided email addresses for 410,000 people including NSA
whistleblower Edward Snowden – was served with a court order in
2013, requiring him to install surveillance equipment. This
prompted him to close the service.

Zimmerman paid close attention to the situation, realizing that
Washington could also serve Silent Circle – which offered voice,
text, and email services – with the same order. He shut down the email service, wiped its database and
never looked back.

Now
the company is setting up its headquarters in Switzerland –
where, according to Zimmerman, he is “less likely to
encounter legal pressures.”

On its blog, Silent Circle credits Switzerland with having the
“world's most robust privacy laws,” adding that the
company will continue to grow its Washington and London offices,
but that “most of our new growth will take place in our new
headquarters.”

While the Snowden revelations have opened the world's eyes to
mass surveillance, Zimmerman knew the possibilities all along.

The user manual for PGP, written in 1991 and updated seven years
later, warns: “Today, email can be routinely and
automatically scanned for interesting keywords, on a vast scale,
without detection. This is like driftnet fishing.”

Perhaps it is this insight that has
led to such widespread support for Silent Circle. Earlier this
year, the encryption system raised US$50 million in a second
round of outside funding.

In addition to Silent Circle and PGP, Zimmerman also played a
role in developing Blackphone, the world's most spy-resistant
phone. In addition to its sealed operating system largely
preventing data leaks, Silent Circle is used on the phone to
encode all calls, texts, and contacts.

The second generation of the phone, costing around $700, is
expected to be released this year, and will be followed by an
attempt at a tablet device.